How to Use flay in a Sentence

flay

verb
  • The Indians tie Clyde to the Skinning Tree and flay him alive.
    Jennifer Percy, Harper's magazine, 20 Jan. 2020
  • After a few more tries, the doctor pulled it out in one piece and laid it out, legs flayed.
    Scottie Andrew, CNN, 23 Aug. 2019
  • For that, Pelosi was flayed on Twitter by left-wing accounts.
    The Washington Post, The Denver Post, 17 May 2017
  • Christ looked as dead as Uday Hussein, his welts dark and crusty, knees flayed, and feet, hands, and shoulder joints swollen black.
    Nell Zink, Harper's magazine, 28 Oct. 2019
  • Pedraza had been shot in the head and decapitated, and the skin had been flayed from her skull.
    Washington Post, 12 Oct. 2017
  • Future is, of course, no stranger to flaying himself on records.
    Hannah Giorgis, The Atlantic, 6 July 2018
  • Other works depict elephants killed for their tusks and trees flayed of their bark.
    Washington Post, 8 Oct. 2019
  • On her right side, the skin was flayed off, probably as the porpoise struggled while drowning in the net.
    Rod Nordland, New York Times, 27 Apr. 2017
  • Inside, a man is stretching skin on a flaying bench, and the stench of death is overwhelming.
    Alex Ross, The New Yorker, 26 June 2023
  • Much like zombies in Day of the Dead, the flayed are drawn to the steelworks where their bodies literally melt.
    Amy MacKelden, Harper's BAZAAR, 4 July 2019
  • Fain flayed the White House for failing to attach to the loan safeguards to protect existing jobs.
    Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2023
  • Bodies are flayed open, ripped apart at the ribs, viscera spilling, hung like cattle at the butcher; sores and lesions bloom on skin.
    Nina MacLaughlin, BostonGlobe.com, 18 July 2019
  • Perfect for flaying open your heart on a summer afternoon, with a glass of something cool to soothe the sting.
    Olivia Waite, New York Times, 23 June 2023
  • The narrator may be flayed open, but the other characters are held at arm’s length, vague and bloodless.
    Naomi Huffman, The Atlantic, 22 Jan. 2024
  • The camps were thrifty, too, weaving carpets from human hair, flaying skin to make lampshades.
    Hugh Hunter, Philly.com, 27 Feb. 2018
  • Rushworth and his buddies got their revenge the next day at the ditch race, where Jewell flayed Miettinen the Finn to take first place.
    Sol Neelman, WIRED, 10 Sep. 2012
  • For white liberals there is a kind of ecstasy to be achieved by flaying themselves with Coates’s hot, stinging words.
    Kyle Smith, National Review, 21 Sep. 2017
  • Bloom’s favorite subject: The human body freshly released from the grip of death, often flayed and purpling, flesh turned inside out.
    Globe Staff, BostonGlobe.com, 1 Aug. 2019
  • The critics who flay Ryan as a coward have never understood that his actions are a form of idealism.
    Jonathan Chait, Daily Intelligencer, 11 Apr. 2018
  • The main presidential bodyguard not on duty that night, William H. Crook, flayed Parker in his memoir.
    Petula Dvorak, Washington Post, 18 July 2024
  • One is contested on grass as scores of limbs flay about for 90 minutes in front of thousands of passionate onlookers.
    Don Riddell and Daniel Gallan, CNN, 21 Aug. 2019
  • Since then, the U.S. president has continued to flay China for the massive trade imbalance between the two nations.
    Tim Culpan | Bloomberg, Washington Post, 5 Mar. 2019
  • At El Submarino, the bluish raw shrimp are flayed down the middle and fanned out in a molcajete, over cucumber and beneath red onion and avocado.
    Hannah Goldfield, The New Yorker, 23 June 2023
  • They are usually flayed in the media with a torrent of negative coverage.
    John Fund, National Review, 8 Oct. 2017
  • For his part, Mr. Cunningham is happy to flay Mr. Tillis, but has little appetite to elevate the national stakes.
    Jonathan Martin, New York Times, 23 Sep. 2020
  • These days, 25 Water Street is getting flayed and disemboweled.
    Curbed, 24 Jan. 2024
  • And Billy is recruiting more townspeople as hosts, all with the aim of building a creature that can take out Eleven once and for all, leaving it free to flay the minds of pretty much everyone else alive.
    Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 15 July 2019
  • The caller reported a man talking to himself, staring at girls and flaying his arms everywhere.
    Staff Report, Orange County Register, 6 June 2017
  • By breed, Sonny is a pariah, or desi, dog, slender, keen, and honey-coloured, about 35 pounds, with a narrow rib cage and flayed, Iggy Pop–like musculature.
    James Parker, The Atlantic, 13 June 2024
  • Cunningham is happy to flay Tillis, but has little appetite to elevate the national stakes.
    Jonathan Martin New York Times, Star Tribune, 22 Sep. 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'flay.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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